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History of Education: After the Civil War. Chapter 5A - Foundations. Freedmen’s Bureau. Offered food, medicine, and seed Secured legal rights Created educational opportunities With hundreds of Northern teachers going south to help the freed slaves. 1867.
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History of Education: After the Civil War Chapter 5A - Foundations
Freedmen’s Bureau • Offered food, medicine, and seed • Secured legal rights • Created educational opportunities • With hundreds of Northern teachers going south to help the freed slaves
1867 • Congress created a Department of Education • Henry Barnard was appointed the director • Collected statistics and facts on education • To promote universal education
Early 20th Century • Public school facilities and instruction were criticized • Beginning of scientific research in teaching and learning • An increase in the testing for abilities • Magazines, newspapers, and radio shaped public opinion • Public was able to get news more quickly and in larger amounts
1950’s & 1960’s 1950’s - Racial segregation in schools was made unconstitutional 1960’s - federal government influenced education with money, legislation, and ideology - aid given to schools serving children of low income families
1960’s (continued) • - legislation guaranteeing racial and gender equity • - new entitlement for students with disabilities • - began bilingual and bi-cultural programs • - began career education programs
1965 • Elementary & Secondary Education Act (ESEA) • Made the federal government the policy maker for schools • Allocated money for poverty programs, textbooks, school libraries, teaching aids, remedial instruction, counseling, and health services
1980’s • Returned power and financial responsibility for education programs to states and localities • Decrease in federal money; but an increase in educational reform
21st Century • Trying to improve educational practice through performance standards • And by setting higher academic standards